__________________________________________________

Call for Publications

Theme: Gender and (Post)Colonialism
Subtitle: Locating Marginalised Voices
Publication: Dutch Journal for Gender Studies
Date: Special Issue
Deadline: 1.2.2015

__________________________________________________


The argument made by literary critic and theorist Gayatri Chakravorti
Spivak in the 1980s (Spivak 1988) that the recovery of subaltern
female voices is virtually impossible has not been without its
critics. Different scholars have stated in response to Spivak that a
full recovery of the female perspective might not be possible, but
that there is fractured evidence of her voice that offers the
possibility for unsettling colonial master narratives (Mani 1998,
Joseph 2004, Chaudhuri 2010). This raises questions about how
scholars could go about finding marginalised voices and what these
voices would add. The Dutch Journal for Gender Studies will dedicate
a special issue to the subject of locating voices of gendered
marginalised ‘others’, and invites academic articles that reflect on
issues of methodology and interpretation involved in researching
marginalised voices in colonial and postcolonial contexts. 

The question of how to write history ‘from the bottom up’ has been on
the minds of social, feminist, and postcolonial historians since the
1960s. Strategies for studying textual sources held in institutional
archives were developed in order to read colonial sources ‘against
the grain’, looking for contradictions, disruptions and meaningful
silences. In response, Ann Laura Stoler has highlighted the
importance of reading colonial archives ‘along the grain’ before
examining the voices of ‘others’ represented in these archives,
because researchers who have an understanding of how these records
came to be can pick up on uncertainties, doubts, and personal
concerns of the author (Stoler 2009). Ricardo Roque and Kim Wagner
propose a third distinct reading strategy, which derives from
historical anthropology and is concerned with the actual
cross-cultural encounters and material practices in which colonial
knowledge is embedded. In this reading strategy, colonial accounts,
like reports or testimonies on the encounter between Europeans and
non-Europeans, are considered intercultural objects, which can
themselves be used as avenues to gaining access to these historical
encounters (Roque and Wagner 2012). These three reading strategies,
alternative or complementary as they might be, indicate the
directions in which we can engage with (post-)colonial materials.
Whereas reading strategies are conceptualised in application to
textual sources, the analysis of visual and material culture provides
an opportunity to critically engage with other realms of knowledge.
Ludmilla Jordanova emphasizes the idea of ‘reading’ a visual or
material source for its message is too limited, and researchers
should be attentive to the multiple meanings objects or images might
have dependent on the context and interpreter (Jordanova 2012). 

This special issue of the Dutch Journal for Gender Studies, entitled
Gender and (Post)Colonialism: Locating Marginalised Voices, will
collect contributions reflecting on strategies for retrieving
marginalised voices in (post)colonial textual, visual and material
sources. We welcome contributions which focus on a (post)colonial
context or use (post)colonial sources – not restricted to the Low
Countries – and read or engage with (post)colonial archives/sources
from a postcolonial feminist perspective

Submission of abstracts (+/- 450 words) to: [email protected]

Deadline for submission of abstracts: February 1, 2015

Deadline for first version articles (max. 6000 words incl. references
and bibliography): April 15, 2015

Click here for Author Guidelines:
http://en.aup.nl/wosmedia/1261/author_instructions_tijdschrift_voor_genderstudies.pdf

Guest Editors:
Maaike Derksen and Margriet Fokken

The Dutch Journal for Gender Studies (Tijdschrift voor Genderstudies)
is an interdisciplinary journal. It is primarily a platform for
authors who conduct research on or are located in the Netherlands and
Flanders, but also invites contributions from and about other areas.
Articles may be written in Dutch or English.

For further information see:
http://www.tijdschriftgenderstudies.nl




__________________________________________________


InterPhil List Administration:
http://interphil.polylog.org

Intercultural Philosophy Calendar:
http://cal.polylog.org

__________________________________________________

 

Reply via email to